Well, that's not strictly true. If you're worried about code portability and don't know which compilers you need to support, you can't rely on language features of C++0x.
On the matter of static_assert - if you are only targeting modern compilers, go ahead. Should you run into one that doesn't implement it as a language feature, for 9 uses out of 10 you can implement it as a template+macro.
my money is still on a bug in your code, since the locks should be pretty damn well-tested, and as long as they're correct, it's hard to imagine any implementation of unordered_map that'd fail
I've got a concurrent_unordered_map. I use the insert function (and no other) to try to insert into the map concurrently. However, many times, this crashes deep in the insert function internals. Here is some code:
class ModuleBase {
public:
virtual Wide::Parser::AST* GetAST() = 0;
virtu...
@DeadMG I'm concerned about the Module/DynamicModule being destroyed during or before the make_pair due to some aspect of the library's implementation not handling move construction well. I'd be sorely tempted to print this in ModuleBase::~ModuleBase and compare recent ones to the values in the call stack when you encounter the crash.
I think you're accessing them after free, and the single threaded case is working because the memory is intact until it's used.
I suspect that the map's insert is copying the result of "std::make_pair(module->name->name, std::move(m))" and expecting the copy to have the same contents as the parameter later on.
A breakpoint on ~ModuleBase shouldn't be hit at all until your map is destroyed, if I've read you correctly. That'd decide it pretty quickly.
@DeadMG Yeah, still pre-coffee for me. I thought of that just after I said it
I don't have a lot of confidence in this diagnosis, but I can't run your code, and the obvious things are obviously working =)
user406009
01:54
Fuck the standard. Two new great, expanding the world of C++ great, features are added, rvalue references and lambda, and the stupid committee manages to forget to let the features work together. WTF
@rvalue That's not exactly true. The concurrent unordered map moves it into a node, and then fits the node into the unordered map, and destroys it if it can't find a place.
but as that can only occur if there is already a value at that position, and I never re-use the ModuleContents, then it's no big deal
Hi, how many compares is a heapsort is supposed to make? (is this a set number for n? e.g. comparing 32 items will give 320 compares exactly every time?)
> "We turned off all the cameras in 1990," Stone says, "and all the other instruments that were designed just to look at bodies as we flew by. Space is really empty. And Voyager will never be very close to any other object in our solar system, or even in our galaxy, for that matter."
one more thing: user defined assignment operator != template user defined assignment operator ? i.e suppose I have foo<int> x,y; x=y; , won't it work if I don't define user defined assignment operator but template user defined assignment operator?, consider foo has reference member
for now, I'm rewriting some C code with a lot of macros, and I replace them with inline functions. But I see, that I replace cool code with type inference with old school code with explicit types. This makes me sad =\
they can be templates, but I see where they are used, and I see that can be non-template functions, and it looks better because it's really easier to get code with explicit types.
@MrAnubis I'm not sure. I know the thing is a bit fuzzy with copy constructors vs templated constructors in C++03 vs MSVC bugs vs C++11. Not sure if it's the same about assignment.
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@angryInsomniac i think the difference is how big the file content is and how much space is allocated on the disk. this grows in sector sizes which are most common 4kb
and because it's just rarely worth it, given that for a lot of people, the files that take up space are already compressed (images/music/videos), and that the extra decompression step tends to hurt overall performance, and most people just have plenty of disk space in the first place
Initially p1 stores the address of x (which you obtained with &x). Later on you set p1 to store a null address.
In the first snippet you decided to print not the address stored in p1, but the address of p1 itself. p1 is a variable like any other, and just like with the rest of them, &p1 ...
> I hate the fact that you have shared this. I bet we will spend the next year answering silly variations on the usage of this. When in reality we never want to see it again. – Loki Astari 37 secs ago
@Xeo For friends I bought a pretty good WLAN router for a very reasonable price (<€10) at ebay last year. Picked it up at some guy's in Berlin, took it to the friends, installed it, and they are happy about it since.
Hey people , mind taking a look at my question ? (Not dropping links , please dont automatically downvote) http://stackoverflow.com/questions/8644931/writing-the-huffman-tree-to-file-after-compression/8644990#8644990
> That's what I thought of doing initially, but the problem is that the tree can be huge ! So I'll have to write an Integer , that's 4 bytes right there ! And If I write it as a character string then I use one byte for each integer that i put in there. Not very efficient for a program that's trying to compress stuff by saving 2 or 3 bits at a time.
Er, if the tree is huge, how much does 4 bytes cost?
@Abyx Probably being paranoid , I haven't really dealt with bit level stuff much ! If I use this approach i guess the initial header size will also be a bottleneck to how big my tree can be ( I guess that's not much of an issue though)
A 32-bit unsigned integer can cover a 4GB tree. If you want to support bigger files you need a bigger header. A 64-bit unsigned integer can cover a 16 EB tree.